When does “Other concern” make sense?
Not every case fits neatly into one of the standard categories. Perhaps you have several concerns at the same time, an unusual procedural status, or you're not sure how your situation should be framed legally.
In all of these cases, “Other concern” is the right choice:
- You have received an official decision and don't know how to respond.
- Several concerns overlap (e.g. naturalization + family reunification).
- An administrative matter that doesn't fit the standard categories.
- Appeal or objection proceedings in a special case.
- Need for advice before filing an application, clarifying the requirements.
How we help you
You describe your situation in a free-text field, in as much detail as you like. Our lawyers are specialised across the full spectrum of residence and migration law; based on your description we select the best match.
Mark your case as urgent if a deadline is running (e.g. filing deadline, expiry of a residence permit, risk of deportation). In urgent cases, the lawyer usually gets in touch within 24 hours.
What you should mention in your description
- What happened? Background, current status, desired outcome.
- Which deadlines are running? Dates of decisions, appointments, expiry of permits.
- Which documents do you have? Official decision, rejection, residence title, correspondence with authorities.
- What have you already done? Applications, correspondence, earlier consultations.